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Egypt lost $10 billion in corrupt gas contracts, as daily blackouts spread

Press Release 13 Mar 2014 admin

Egypt lost $10 billion in gas revenues from 2005-2011, according to a report launchedفساد تعاقدات الغاز في عصر مبارك yesterday by EIPR and Platform. Contracts signed during the Mubarak years allowed the export of billions of cubic metres of underpriced gas to Jordan, Spain and Israeli-occupied Palestine.

Some of the individuals behind these deals were convicted of corruption. EIPR and Platform’s new report uses court data to quantify the revenues lost to Egypt by exporting underpriced gas. One of the report’s findings is that during the six year period (2005-2011) of selling gas abroad for a very low price, Egypt lost more than double the country’s annual health expenditure. Instead, it effectively subsidised the Spanish, Jordanian and Israeli economies.

The report is only available in Arabic.

Egypt is now facing a drastic energy shortage, with daily blackouts interrupting the lives of millions. Negotiations have begun over importing gas from Israel and the Gulf states, at many times the price it was previously exported. The seeming shortage of indigenous energy resources is leading to controversial proposals to import coal, build nuclear plants or expand hydraulic fracking for shale gas.

Structurally, the same conditions that allowed the problematic contracts to be signed in the first place remain today:

Energy expert and co-author of the report Mika Minio-Paluello said “I’ve analysed oil and gas contracts from Uganda, Kazakhstan and Congo, and I’ve never seen a country ripped off this badly. The Egyptian people are paying for elite corruption with blackouts, blackmarket fuel and a collapsing economy. The solutions lie in democratic accountability over all contracts and a rapid transition to renewable energy.” Minio added “The same situation continues today. The contracts remain secret. Accountability still does not exist. In the past we accessed some information through court cases brought by third parties. But the new amendments to the investment law undermine citizen engagement by restricting the right to challenge contracts in court.”

The report highlights failures in Egyptian oil & gas contracts regarding sovereignty, resource conservation and the environment. It makes proposals for energy and revenue reform, to prevent future corruption, energy failures and mismanagement of natural resources.

The report was launched with a panel discussion titled “Fuelling corruption: Gas and Reconciliation” on March 12th. The panelists were political economist at Stanford University and report co-author Dr Amr Adly, energy expert, author of The Oil Road and report co-author Mika Minio, and economic researcher and journalist in al-Shorouk newspaper Wael Gamal. The panel was chaired by EIPR’s research director Abdou al-Bermawy.

Dr. Adly explained to that this research started in 2011, but the report’s launch was repeatedly postponed after discovery of new evidence and documents when the “Mubarak black box” was open in the aftermath of the 2011 revolution. “One of the court cases we examined included over 2500 pages of difficult-to-read handwritten testimonies.”
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Economic researcher and journalist Wael Gamal explained that the energy issue will be a major cause of suffering in Egypt in the future. Although the main controversy over gas exports focused on Israel because of the  political sensitivity, Egypt had lost more money through exports to Spain. Gamal added “Despite the importance of having a figure for losses which this report provides, the real cost of corruption in gas deals will exceed $10 billion.” Gamal argued that when Egypt has a government willing to carry out real development projects, it risks facing a lack of energy resources.

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